NEW YORK (AP) — There’s Denzel Washington and Billy Crystal, plenty of Shakespeare and a nice dash of Harold Pinter. There’s even a musical of the boxing classic “Rocky” and the much anticipated return of Neil Patrick Harris and “Les Mis.” This upcoming season on Broadway seems to have something for everyone.

Mark Rylance will star in two startlingly different roles: as the love-struck noblewoman Olivia in “Twelfth Night” and as the ruthless and conniving title monarch in “Richard III.” And Ian McKellen, Patrick Stewart, Billy Crudup and Shuler Hensley will all tackle multiple roles in “No Man’s Land” and “Waiting for Godot.” But the most characters this season will be performed by Jefferson Mays, who will play a whopping eight roles in “A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder.”

PINTEREST

Fans of the late Nobel laureate Harold Pinter will be seeing double this season. His play “Betrayal” arrives in October with real-life married stars Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz, and a month later a revival of his “No Man’s Land” will play in repertoire with “Waiting for Godot,” starring Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart. It’s the first time since 1976 that two Pinter plays are simultaneously on Broadway.

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THE BARD

Just two? One playwright will have a staggering four works on Broadway this season — William Shakespeare. First comes “Romeo and Juliet” with Orlando Bloom and Condola Rashad in September, then “Twelfth Night” and “Richard III” with Mark Rylance in November, and then a new “Macbeth” with Ethan Hawke, less than six months after Alan Cumming offered his own one-man version. Oh, and Julie Taymor will direct “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” off-Broadway and Elizabeth Olsen will be Juliet in her own off-Broadway production.

SINGERS TO STAGE

Musicals built around legendary female singers and songwriters are coming thick and fast, starting with Mary Bridget Davies starring in “A Night With Janis Joplin” and “Beautiful: The Carole King Musical” starring Jessie Mueller. Off-Broadway this fall will be Dee Dee Bridgewater as Billie Holiday in “Lady Day” and down the road will be “American Idol” contestant Crystal Bowersox in “Always ... Patsy Cline.” Look for more: Diane Warren’s prodigious songbook has been optioned for a musical.

REVIVE, REVIVE

The second revival of Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun” (with Denzel Washington and Diahann Carroll) and the sixth revival of Tennessee Williams’ “The Glass Menagerie” (with Cherry Jones and Zachary Quinto) are coming to Broadway. The Roundabout Theatre Company will offer the first revival of “Machinal” (starring Rebecca Hall) since it made its debut 85 years ago and also the first revival of Terence Rattigan’s “The Winslow Boy.” The Roundabout is also reviving two celebrated stage works about marriages in crisis — Tom Stoppard’s “The Real Thing” and Donald Margulies’ “Dinner With Friends.”

NEW AND NEWISH

The creators of the Pulitzer Prize-winning “Next to Normal” have returned with the new musical “If/Then” starring Idina Menzel, due on Broadway this spring after a debut in Washington, D.C. Singer Fantasia Barrino and actor Dule Hill team up in “After Midnight,” which appeared off-Broadway last year. Woody Allen has adapted his film “Bullets Over Broadway” into a world premiere musical starring Zach Braff, while Mary-Louise Parker will star in the world premiere of “Snow Geese,” a new play by Sharr White.

“YO, ADRIAN!”

One of the more intriguing offerings will be a musical based on Sylvester Stallone’s 1976 film “Rocky.” It features a score by “Ragtime” veterans Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens, and a story by Thomas Meehan, who wrote “The Producers” and “Hairspray.” The director is Alex Timbers, who directed Broadway’s “The Pee-wee Herman Show” and directed and wrote the book for “Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson.” The “Rocky” musical was a hit in Germany and will throw its hat into the Broadway ring in the spring.

GENDER-BENDING

One of the most likable, bankable Broadway stars — Neil Patrick Harris — will star in an extremely unconventional Broadway show — “Hedwig and the Angry Inch.” Harris goes from the family friendly “Smurfs 2” and the hit TV show “How I Met Your Mother” to a German male transsexual rock singer in a tale of obsession, glam rock, a botched sex-change operation and a quest for identity. The kids may have to stay home for this one.

OLD HOME

When “Les Miserables” arrives on Broadway from a national tour in March, it will find a familiar home — the Imperial Theatre, the show’s former venue on Broadway for nearly 13 years. The new show marks the third time “Les Mis” has made it to Broadway, but the 2012 film with Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe, Anne Hathaway and Amanda Seyfried gave it fresh heat.

BOOKS-TO-STAGE

John Grisham’s legal thriller “A Time to Kill” comes to Broadway starring Sebastian Arcelus. Robert James Waller’s romantic novel “The Bridges of Madison County” arrives, starring Kelli O’Hara. And the musical “Big Fish” — based on a 1998 novel “Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions” by Daniel Wallace and also a 2003 film — comes around starring Norbert Leo Butz and with songs by Andrew Lippa. “Act One,” the autobiography of Moss Hart, will make it onstage at Lincoln Center.

MOUSE RETURNS

Disney Theatrical Productions, which has produced the big hits “Mary Poppins,” “Newsies” and “The Lion King,” is preparing a new musical based on the animated hit “Aladdin,” with new songs by hit maker Alan Menken and direction and choreography by Tony Award winner Casey Nicholaw, whose previous hits include “The Book of Mormon” and “The Drowsy Chaperone.” The new musical will first be staged in Toronto this November with an eye to bringing it to Broadway’s New Amsterdam Theatre in early 2014.

CRYSTAL GEMS

Billy Crystal’s poignant one-man autobiographical show “700 Sundays” was a Broadway success during the 2004-2005 season, playing to sold-out houses and winning a Tony Award for special theatrical experience. Crystal took it on the road, both in America and abroad. Now it’s coming back — to die. Crystal insists he’s saying goodbye to the show in the city where it all took place. Previews begin in November.

IN THE WORKS?

Newly crowned Tony-winning lead actor Tracy Letts is planning a quick return to Broadway as the playwright of “Killer Joe.” “Allegiance,” George Takei ‘s show about the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II, and a musical based on the film “Ever After” led by Kathleen Marshall, are eyeing Broadway theaters this season. Hugh Jackman’s Broadway return in “Houdini” will depend on how a full reading of the show goes in December. Plus, the Broadway debut of the goofy “Dames at Sea” is promised next year.

OFF-BROADWAY NUGGETS

Cherry Jones will be in “When We Were Young and Unafraid” at New York City Center. Off-Broadway theaters will also boast the return of Blythe Danner, Betty Buckley, Maggie Gyllenhaal and Laurie Metcalf, as well as plays by August Wilson, Bruce Norris, David Henry Hwang, Horton Foote, Stephen Adly Guirgis and Ethan Coen, and even a stage version of “Little Miss Sunshine.” Mike Daisey, the disgraced monologist who acknowledged making up chunks of his last show about Apple products, returns to the Public Theater with a slate of 29 new works.

CHRISTMAS CHEER

The Tony Award-nominated musical adapted from the film “A Christmas Story” will play at Madison Square Garden with many of the original adult cast members — including Dan Lauria, John Bolton, Erin Dilly and Caroline O’Connor — who made the show a delight last Christmas on Broadway. The show marks the Broadway debut of rising songwriting team Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, as well as a kid who gets his tongue stuck to a frozen flagpole during a triple-dog-dare.